Quiet Please 480419 046 Clarissa
# Quiet Please: "Clarissa"
Step into the shadowed parlor where Clarissa awaits—a woman suspended between worlds, caught in a nightmare of her own making. This chilling episode of Quiet Please draws listeners into an intimate chamber of psychological terror, where the line between reality and delusion blurs with every whispered confession. As Clarissa recounts the circumstances of her mysterious affliction, the sound design isolates you in the darkness with her: the creak of floorboards, the distant ticking of a clock, the almost imperceptible scratching that might be at the window—or might be inside her mind. The episode builds with masterful restraint, revealing horrors not through bombast but through implication, leaving your imagination to conjure fears far more disturbing than any explicit description could manage.
Quiet Please represents a fascinating moment in American radio when the medium was shedding its reliance on broad comedy and action serials to explore the psychological and supernatural. Produced during the immediate post-war years, the show's emphasis on atmosphere and inner torment resonated with audiences processing their own anxieties in an uncertain atomic age. Unlike the sensationalism of competing horror programs, Quiet Please demanded something more from its listeners—attention, imagination, and a willingness to sit in genuine discomfort. Episodes like "Clarissa" showcase host Ernest Chappell's sophisticated approach to radio drama, where less is always more, and silence itself becomes a character.
Dust off your radio dial and settle into this 1949 transmission of Quiet Please. In fourteen minutes, you'll understand why devoted fans still speak of this obscure gem in hushed tones. Some stories, once heard, never truly leave you.